Lesson Planning - Lecture Notes
Lesson Planning - Lecture Notes
I. WHAT IS A LESSON? “A type of organized social event that occurs in virtually all
cultures. Lessons in different places may vary in topic, time, place, atmosphere,
methodology and materials, but they all, essentially, are concerned with learning as their
main objective, involve the participation of learner(s) and teacher(s), and are limited and
pre-scheduled as regards time, place and membership.” (Ur 1996:213)
The PPP model offers by tradition a safe way to language teaching. In this model grammar
constitutes the core. Accuracy is central in the model. Functions constitute the spiral part
that surrounds the core (i.e., grammar) and supplement the EFL language programme.
• Warm-up (Introduction)
• STAGE 1: Presentation (meaningful input, understanding, short-term memory …)
• STAGE 2: Practice (skill automation, long-term memory, authenticity …)
• STAGE 3: Production (authenticity, application & expansion, personal
expression …)
• Follow-up (skills integration, homework)
Thus students need chances to reflect on language and to try to systematize what they
know.
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Therefore, the TBL model offers an innovative way to language learning. The focus of the
TBL model is on the task. The class strives for communication and fluency. Language
tasks invite students to plan, report and prepare activities. Students are invited to interact
and produce language naturally. Grammar comes at the end of the lesson as part of
teaching. The students themselves are involved in investigating structures and forms.
The aim of tasks in the Task Based Learning (TBL) model is to help students explore
language, to make them develop an awareness of aspects of grammar, vocabulary and
pronunciation. Students need to assist each other in systematizing what they have observed
and learned about certain features of language. They also need to co-operate with each
other in order to clarify concepts and to notice new things by ordering, listing, classifying
and categorizing them. Students learn by doing!
The TBL model can be used as an alternative model to the PPP model. In the TBL model
we can rely on tasks. Tasks are creative classroom activities which have meaning as their
primary focus. Task–Based Learning is a flexible model of teaching in which students are
free to learn by doing, by experiencing what they already know and by moving ahead,
working on the whole body of language and by being attentive to meaning.
In TBL, learners are invited to practise language based on their experience within a holistic
context - similar to the context L1 learners are exposed to when talking to their mothers,
peers and siblings. The purpose of tasks is to increase relevant exposure of learners to
written and spoken English. This is achieved though interaction in meaningful activities in
which communication is of primary importance. The TBL framework looks like the
diagram below:
• each stage within the TBL framework supplies the students with a different goal,
and has a very brief report; the focus of each task is always on meaning;
• tasks give students confidence in speaking;
• within a task-based approach, students of different levels can work together more
easily; the less competent ones can learn from the others, and gain confidence from
the support of the small group; and
• the focus on language comes at the end of the lesson.
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A SKELETON OF THE TBL MODEL
Planning
• Ss are asked to tackle the problem and report briefly to the whole class.
• Ss draft and rehearse what they want to say or write.
• T goes round to advise students on language.
• If the reports are in writing, T can encourage peer-editing and the use of dictionaries.
Report
Analysis
• T sets some language-focused tasks (eg., Ss are asked to find words and phrases related to the title
or read the transcript and find words ending in s or ’s and say what the s means or find all the verbs
in the simple past form or underline and classify the questions in the transcript based on the texts
students have read. A concrete example of language work on adjectives and adverbs is illustrated by
the tasks based on the following love letter.
• T starts Ss off, then Ss continue.
• T goes round to help.
• In plenary, T reviews the analysis – possibly by writing relevant language up on the board.
Practice
T conducts practice activities. Ss are involved in choral repetition of the phrases identified or in memory
challenge games (eg., sentence completion; matching the past tense verbs with the subjects or objects they
had in the text; or dictionary reference work on new words) based on the language analysis.
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WHAT TO REMEMBER WHEN PLANNING A LESSON
Lesson planning can help teachers to think logically through the stages in relation to the
time available. It also keeps teachers on target and acts as a record of what the class has
done. In lesson planning we also need to consider the pedagogic purpose of a (reading) text
in terms of its usefulness as below:
• TALO: Text as a linguistic object (in which the focus is on grammar, vocabulary,
etc.)
• TAVI: Text as a vehicle of information (in which the focus is on communication)
• TASP: Text as a stimulus for production (in which the focus is on writing and
speaking skills)
• TASE: Text as a source of enjoyment (in which the focus is on feelings)
2. GENERAL PRINCIPLES:
3. BEING SPECIFIC:
Your lesson plan needs to be specific in terms of language used and relate to:
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• the curriculum specified by the Ministry of Education
• your future lesson plans, and the way students will be evaluated.
• Tempo
• Organization: individual work, pair or group work
• Mode and skill: reception or production, spoken or written language
• Difficulty
• Topic: both language teaching point and non-linguistic content
• Mood: light, fun-based or serious, happy or sad
• Stir-settle: conversations compared with dictations …
• Active-passive
References:
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